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What Happened to Conservatives?
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
The
so-called conservative movement of the last 20 years, starting with
the Reagan revolution of the 1980s, followed by the 1994 Gingrich
takeover of the House, and culminating in the early 2000s with Republican
control of both Congress and the White House, seems a terrible failure
today. Republicans have failed utterly to shrink the size of government;
instead it is bigger and costlier than ever before. Federal spending
spirals out of control, new Great Society social welfare programs
have been created, and the national debt is rising by more than
a half-trillion dollars per year. Whatever happened to the conservative
vision supposedly sweeping the nation?
One thing
is certain: those who worked and voted for less government, the
very foot soldiers in the conservative revolution, have been deceived.
Today, the ideal of limited government has been abandoned by the
GOP, and real conservatives find their views no longer matter.
True limited
government conservatives have been co-opted by the rise of the
neoconservatives in Washington. The neoconservatives a
name they gave themselves are largely hardworking, talented
people who have worked their way into positions of power in Washington.
Their views dominate American domestic and foreign policy today,
as their ranks include many of the Presidents closest advisors.
They have successfully moved the Republican Party away from the
Goldwater-era platform of frugal government at home and nonintervention
abroad, toward a big-government, world empire mentality more reminiscent
of Herbert Hoover or Woodrow Wilson. In doing so, they have proven
that their ideas are neither new nor conservative.
Modern neoconservatives
are not necessarily monolithic in their views, but they generally
can be described as follows:
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They
agree with Trotskys idea of a permanent revolution;
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They
identify strongly with the writings of Leo Strauss;
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They
express no opposition to the welfare state, and will expand
it to win votes and power;
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They
believe in a powerful federal government;
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They
believe the ends justify the means in politics that hardball
politics is a moral necessity;
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They
believe lying is necessary for the state to survive;
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They
believe certain facts should be known only by the political
elite, and withheld from the general public;
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They
believe in preemptive war and the naked use of military force
to achieve any desired ends;
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They
openly endorse the idea of an American empire, and hence unapologetically
call for imperialism;
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They
are very willing to use force to impose American ideals;
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They
scoff at the Founding Fathers belief in neutrality in
foreign affairs;
-
They
believe 9/11 resulted from a lack of foreign entanglements,
not from too many;
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They
are willing to redraw the map of the Middle East by force, while
unconditionally supporting Israel and the Likud Party;
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They
view civil liberties with suspicion, as unnecessary restrictions
on the federal government;
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They
despise libertarians, and dismiss any arguments based on constitutional
grounds.
Those
who love liberty, oppose unjustified war, and resent big-brother
government must identify the philosophy that is influencing policy
today. If the neoconservatives are wrong and I believe
they are we must demonstrate this to the American people,
and offer an alternative philosophy that is both morally superior
and produces better results in terms of liberty and prosperity.
It is time for true conservatives to retake the conservative movement.
July 15, 2003
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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